Celebrating A Wonderful Way To Be A Catholic
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Emmaus ECC Newsletter

March 6, 2026

The Third Sunday of Lent

Living Water

Preparing for Mass over Zoom: If attending by Zoom create a sacred space for yourself and your family. It is helpful to light a candle and put down a small cloth where you will place your bit of bread and wine. Download and print the worship aids. We gather at 10:00 am and mass begins at 10:30 am. Request Zoom link HERE.


Come to Church: All are welcome! When you ask people how they found us, the answer is often that they heard about us from a friend. Be that friend. Invite them to come with you to mass in our Sacred Space. We encourage you to come in person if you can. We would love to welcome you to join us.


Diocesan meeting: We are meeting as a diocese on March 9th at 6:30 pm. All parishioners are invited to this open meeting. This is where we set the direction for our diocese. Is it time to plan our next retreat? Email Bishop Kedda for the link.


This Lent: Our diocese is having Wednesday prayer services at 7:00 pm. Here is the Zoom link: HERE. The passcode is: lent. These will be short times of prayer as we journey together through Lent. Come join us.


Ignatian Solidarity is offering reflections of "Stubborn Hope." Subscribe to receive these daily reflections HERE. These are wonderful daily reflections.


Dignity USA sent us the following: Ashes to Alleluia, our weekly Lenten Reflection Series for 2026. Join us on Wednesdays starting February 25, through April 1, at 8pm ET / 5pm PT for prayerful reflection, shared wisdom and hope-filled preparation for Easter. Go HERE to register.


Interfaith Women's Conference: March 28th. "One Light, Many Paths: Journeying Together" Every two years the Associated Ministries of Tacoma presents an amazing conference for women (or those that identify as such). Enjoy a day of sisterhood and comradery, gentle morning yoga, two 75-minute workshops of your choice, lunch, local organizational and retail vendors, hands-on service projects and more (all for $45). 9:30 am-3:30 pm at Pierce College, Fort Steilacoom, Lakewood. See information HERE and register. (Note from +Kedda. I have attended this conference twice and loved it. I am not able to attend this year but highly recommend it to those of you who can.)


ECC House of Laity newsletter: HERE.

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Presiding Bishop Nominating Committee Nominates: Current Presiding Bishop

Bishop Paul “Pablo” Burson

We now enter the second phase of the ECC’s Presiding Bishop nomination process: “Floor Nominations.” The committee will accept nominations of candidates through May 21, 2026 according to the process laid out in the constitution and statutes. Inquiries can be sent to Claudia Kilby at claudia.kilby@gmail.com. (See Constitution and Statutes.)

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Synaxis: A good practice any time, but a good way to celebrate Lent is this daily prayer where the ECC and the OCC come together under the sponsorship of the Franciscans of Reconciliation. Synaxis takes place every day at 3:00 pm Pacific time. This is a time to share with one another as well as pray together. Use link HERE. Come join us for prayer.


Passion/Palm Sunday: March 29th. Our new Easter candle has arrived! This is your reminder that it is time to find a cross as the centerpiece of our decorations for this new Easter candle. We will be decorating the candle after mass on Passion/Palm Sunday.


Modern Mystics Book Group: Send your book suggestions to Deacon Connie. We will be starting a new book after Easter. Is there a book that you would like to read with others? It is amazing how much more we get out of a book when we discuss it together.


Food Bank: Our support is still crucial! Please bring canned goods and other non-perishables to church with you on Sunday and put them in our food bank bag. To donate to the Thurston County Food Bank, go HERE. Your generosity means families in our community will have the resources they need.


No Kings Olympia: March 28th. Meet at First Christian Church at 11:30 am for our "walk in the park." The event is noon to 3:00 pm. Bring signs, water, hats, lunch/snack. Invite your neighbors to come with you. We are invited to rise up, take to the streets, and say it loud: no thrones, no crowns, no kings. We’re not watching history happen—we’re making it. Join us. More details can be found HERE.


Hunger Walk: We participate in the Thurston County Hunger Walk each year. They have sent us the date -- May 3rd. Read more HERE. There will be more details as we get closer to this date.


Old Catholic Theology Summer School in Utrecht: July 5-10; 12-17, 2026. Plan ahead! See the information HERE.

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Websites to visit often: Bookmark our community website HERE and also our diocesan website HERE.


Follow Interfaith Works on Facebook HERE.


Facebook Page: Stay in touch! Visit our Emmaus ECC Facebook page for news during the week HERE. Visit the PNW Diocesan page HERE.


Bishop Kedda's blog: You can check it out HERE. Right now, she has started a series of reflections on her book All Creation Waits. Much has happened as the years have gone by -- how much of what she wrote is still relevant today.


If you have suggestions for how our community of Emmaus could be reaching out into our neighborhood to make a difference, contact Deacon Connie and share your ideas.


 Lord,


when

you declare to

a woman at the well

everything about her life,


we think of our own lives as well.


You know each

of our ins and outs too,

when we sit and when we stand.


when we

yearn for light, love, beauty and peace, for

worship of you in Spirit and truth.

Still, often we remain dry!

Come, Lord Jesus,

quench our thirst

for life within

your


living water.


The Sunday Website at St. Louis University


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The Third Sunday of Lent

Thirst for Living Water


Water is a symbol of life, especially in desert lands. Living creatures, including people, can’t live without water. Where we live water is common, ordinary stuff and most of us take it for granted. In fact, most of us have never really been that thirsty. But we can imagine what it is like to be thirsty.


In Sunday's Gospel story Jesus meets a woman at a well and asks her for a drink. This is important, because it symbolizes more than Jesus being thirsty for water. This request, as we see from what happens next, also symbolizes God’s thirst for us; God always reaching out to us first, seeking our trust, our faith and our love. What we discover in this story is that Jesus is the river of love between God and ourselves. We are invited to drink of the mystery of this outpouring of love and be filled.


St. Augustine once said that Jesus loved everybody he ever met as if that one was the only person in the entire world. When the woman at the well looked into the eyes of Jesus, she found someone looking back at her who already loved her. She needed someone to care. She was a woman with so much bad luck and grief in her life. She’d been married five times, and all her husbands had died and/or abandoned her. Most people of that culture would have pitied her, but also would have been afraid of her, like people were afraid of Jonah, and worried that her bad luck would rub off on them. This is why she goes alone to the well, avoiding the pity and the fear of others. In her need, she meets Jesus.


Jesus had a very long conversation with this woman, and I could spend a lot of time talking about how odd and even wrong this was for both, and how marvelous. At that time, Jews did not associate with Samaritans, and men didn’t talk with women. The Gospel of John can be understood on many different levels. I could spend more time talking about why Jesus had to go through Samaria, and what this meant, and the symbolism of the five husbands, but that would make this reflection much too long.


What is important is the way this story demonstrates the journey of conversion that all of us take. Jesus guides the woman from ignorance to enlightenment, from misunderstanding to a clearer understanding. We see her coming to a deeper understanding of who Jesus is as she comes to believe in him as the Messiah.


Then, filled with living water, she runs back to town and brings others to meet Jesus. Living water symbolizes many things but is often a symbol of the Holy Spirit and eternal life. It is the Spirit of Jesus, and of God’s love. Living water is the essence of God’s love, God’s grace, God’s forgiveness, God’s wisdom, and God’s energy – the very presence of God. What Jesus wants to give to us, and wants to renew in us, is a full measure of God’s Holy Spirit.


We often find ourselves like empty buckets, waiting to be filled. When we turn our minds and hearts toward Jesus and open our hearts to him, Jesus pours God’s love into us, and then that love overflows out of us to others. That love flows out as compassion, gentleness, forgiveness, patience, acceptance, peace, joy, friendship, and all those beautiful attitudes and characteristics of God’s love.


When our buckets feel empty, we need to spend more time with Jesus. He can be found in the Word of God proclaimed in our midst, in the sacraments we celebrate, in our prayers, in nature, and most especially in each other. If your bucket has a hole in it, get it repaired through repentance – turning away from sin, from the ways of the world, and be faithful to Jesus and to the Gospel.



Mother Kedda

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Water does not resist. Water flows. When you plunge your hand into it, all you feel is a caress. Water is not a solid wall, it will not stop you. But water always goes where it wants to go, and nothing in the end can stand against it. Water is patient. Dripping water wears away a stone. Remember that, my child. Remember you are half water. If you can't go through an obstacle, go around it. Water does.

~Margaret Atwood~

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FAQ: How Can You Be Catholic if You Are Not Under Rome?


While those of us who have been with the Ecumenical Catholic Communion for many years no longer think about this question, it still comes up in conversations. There is a simple answer to this question. We are catholics because we are rooted in the original catholics of the early Church. This is one of many topics the Council of Bishops discussed at our annual retreat October 20-24 in Colorado. This article is meant to summarize the elements that continue to make us Catholic, and more specifically that tie us with the Old Catholic Church in Utrecht.


It is important to remember that all of those who followed the teachings of the first apostles were catholics. All the distinct churches were unified under the same umbrella, even with their diversity of expression. In other words, to be catholic means we still hold to the teachings of the early Church before the various separations that would happen down through history. We are faithful to the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church.


In the formation of the Ecumenical Catholic Church our founders made the decision to choose a bishop within the Old Catholic tradition. We chose to be those who look back to the early Church for our understanding of what it means to be catholic. The story of the Old Catholic Church is not one of rebellion, but of remembrance. It is the quiet thread that runs through the tapestry of Christian history, holding fast to the faith of the apostles, the wisdom of the early councils, and the spiritual depth of the mystics and martyrs. It is not a new church—it is the Church that endures.


From the first century, the Christian community was marked by shared leadership, sacramental life, and a deep commitment to the teachings of Christ. The apostles did not build empires; they built communities. Their successors, the bishops of the early Church, governed not by decree but by discernment—gathering in councils, listening to one another, and seeking the Spirit’s guidance.


St. Ignatius of Antioch coined the term “Catholic” to describe the Church. This early bishop’s letters continue to be a treasure as they reveal the earliest understandings of the structure of the Church. He was born in the first century and died in the second century. When St. Ignatius calls the Church “Catholic” it means “according to the whole.” Or as St Vincent of Lerins in the fifth century would explain, Catholicism is: “That we hold that faith which has been believed everywhere, always, by all.”


Read the whole article HERE.

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Clothing donations

Interfaith Works Homeless Services: Donation drop offs can be taken to our admin office 110 11th Ave SE 10am-4pm, Mon-Thurs

Thanks so much!

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The Emmaus ECC Statement Against Racism
 
Our faith calls us to racial justice. We recognize that our faith demands that we transform our beliefs, values, systems, and commitment to racial equity. Scripture has given us the way for such healing to occur, and the responsibility to pursue it.
 
Our faith calls us to lives of charity, advocacy, and action on behalf of marginalized people. In the Pacific Northwest, we are especially committed to justice for Indigenous, Latina and Latino, African American, and Asian communities, whose oppressive histories and realities are well-documented. 
 
We value the voices of people of color in this calling and in these efforts. We believe all people are loved equally by God our creator. We commit to partnering with ecumenical, interfaith, and civic initiatives to pursue racial justice in our local communities. We will seek solidarity with broader initiatives but will not wait on them in order to act. “The time is always right to do what is right” (Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King).

ECC Statement on Race:

Our nation is in desperate need of racial healing and transformation. The healing process cannot begin until the truth of our country's past and present sins are confronted. As people of Christian faith, we acknowledge and renounce both past and present dehumanizing, oppressive, abusive, enslaving, violent and lethal actions and inactions against African American communities. We proclaim that it is time for metanoia – turning away from evil and turning toward God's liberating love.


As members of the ECC, we believe in the power of communication to heal and that the search for truth can lead to justice. As such, we pray that our country will begin a process of truth-seeking that will lead to long-term reconciliation. We in the ECC pledge to begin a deliberate and transparent truth-telling process within our own faith communities.


Jesus, the heart of our faith, lived and died for love. He showed no partiality. God's community is diverse and totally integrated. We pray for God's guidance and mercy as we work to attain racial justice and build the beloved community, walking together the path paved with truth, love, equity, and justice. In the prophetic tradition, we boldly proclaim, "Let justice roll down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream." (Amos 5:24)

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Good

Shepherd

Ministry


Contact Fr. David Gerardot HERE.

Phone: 360-789-5149


For a description of Good Shepherd Ministry go HERE.


For the news and information on Good Shepherd Ministry go HERE.

                     

Joe's Environmental Tip  

Try not to buy non-biodegradable plastic so it doesn’t enter the waste stream and into our waterways. This is especially a problem for juvenile marine fish, who eat non-nutritive microscopic plastic particles.

Elevator speech: An Ecumenical Catholic is someone who wants to engage deeply with the example of the early Church, when congregations were small, inclusive, participatory, and centered on Christ’s message of love, collaboration, and service. Ecumenical Catholics believe that God is present in all things, and that to know and care for all the people, the earth, and all the living things around us is how God wants us to serve Them. (Submitted by Beverly Marshall-Saling).


ECC YouTube Channel: Go HERE for videos of the 2022 ECC Synod. You can also catch the "Parade of Parishes" which shows off what various ECC communities are doing to be churches in action. It is awesome to see other ECC communities around the country.


ECC Ecclesiology: HERE.

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ECC Logo 2

ECC Diocese of the Pacific Northwest


Vision Statement


Ecumenical Catholics of the Pacific Northwest

Restoring relationships of justice, peace, and love

with God, with one another, and with all of Creation

by living out our baptismal ministry as the Body of Christ.



Mission Statement

We are the Ecumenical Catholic Church of the Pacific Northwest embracing a network of sacramental communities in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. As authentic Catholics we celebrate our continuity with the undivided Church of the first millennium and believe that salvation is offered to all. Our unity is built on scripture and the Nicene Creed, and Eucharist is the visible sign of that unity. We are in communion with the association of Churches known as the Ecumenical Catholic Communion and function within the generous parameters of the ECC Constitution.


We Believe

We are the People of God, baptized in Christ – bishop, priests, deacons, and laity – who believe that all people are unique and sacred. We believe that all people possess valuable gifts and talents to be shared. Participation of all the baptized in the work of the Church is essential to our call as the Body of Christ serving in this region. Therefore, we are a synodal Church.


We Offer

The ECC Diocese of the Pacific Northwest offers a joyful way of being Catholic focused on love, not guilt. We welcome all people and offer unity with diversity. We commit ourselves to dialogue and cooperation with others. We believe we have a responsibility to be open to ecumenical dialogue with all the baptized, and we support interfaith cooperation and understanding.


We do

We join together as Church to follow the messianic call of the Holy Spirit to form sacramental communities, to preach the good news of salvation and liberation to all, to offer a refuge in Christ for those who suffer prejudice, and to conform our lives to the example and teachings of Christ Jesus. The setting in which we live fosters an awe of God’s majestic creation, and respect for the land, water, and mountains, as well as the diverse animal life, and all the people who lived on this sacred ground before us.


Distinctions

We are the people of God who seek to dive deeper into the Catholic faith handed down to us by our ancestors from the teachings of the early Church. We believe that anyone who is gifted and called by God, qualified for ordination, and is called by a community, may present themselves for ordination. We believe that marriage is a partnership for the whole of life, and if two adults intend to commit themselves to such a union, they may celebrate a sacramental marriage. We believe that persons have the right to follow their sincere and informed consciences in moral decision making. We recognize that only the Holy Spirit possesses infallibility. No human or institution can claim this.


The Diocesan Constitution may be read HERE. See Website HERE.

Schedule

Contemplative Prayer/Scripture study:   noon on Thursdays at St. John Episcopal Church. Contact Fr. David for more information.    


Sundays we gather at 10:00 and mass begins at 10:30. All are welcome to join us! You are also able to join us by Zoom. Email Bishop Kedda for a link.



Thursday study group: 6:30 pm by Zoom with Oregon Episcopalians.


Synaxis: Every day at 3:00 pm. Sponsored by Franciscans of Reconciliation. Use link HERE. Come join us for prayer.


Wednesday Prayer Service: March 11th at 7:00 pm by Zoom. The passcode is: lent.


Diocesan meeting: March 9th at 6:30 pm by Zoom.


No Kings Olympia: March 28th from noon to 3:00 pm. Meet at First Christian Church at 11:30 am.


Passion/Palm Sunday: March 29th. We will begin with the blessing of palms and a procession.


Triduum: Holy Thursday is April 2nd this year. Easter is on April 5th.


Hunger Walk: May 3rd.



Get to Know a Muslim: First Fridays of every month. Open invitation to join them 1:00 to 3:00 pm. For more information read their flyer HERE.



Enter into Friday Stillness: Fridays. Contact Rev. Kathleen Bellefleuille-Rice for more information. 

Emmaus ECC | Member of the Ecumenical Catholic Communion | www.emmaus-ecc.org
NOTICE 
The Sacraments of Marriage, Reconciliation and Anointing, are available upon request.  Contact us about Funerals and grave side services. Preparation is required for Baptisms -- for parents when children to be baptized are below age seven; for those over age seven, our community supports the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults. Our priests are also happy to meet with you individually, and confidentially, to discuss any spiritual or pastoral concerns you may have. 

Email: Mother Kedda
Bishop of the ECC Pacific Northwest Diocese

We Support Marriage Equality 
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